On Tuesday, 6 August, 2019 12:17, Anne P. Mitchell, Esq. <amitchell@isipp.com> wrote: ...
John Deaux is from London, and a citizen of the UK. John is working in the U.S., at a tech company in Palo Alto, California. John has a Gmail account, and uses Dropbox to store his photos. A law enforcement agency in the UK decides that it wants access to the data in John’s Gmail account and Dropbox account, and so they serve a demand for the production of John’s data on Google and Dropbox, under the CLOUD Act. If the U.S. and the UK have an executive agreement in place as contemplated by the CLOUD Act, Google and Dropbox must comply.
I assume that by "serve a demand" you mean "send a letter requesting"? I realize that the purpose of the terms "serve a demand" if legal globedey-glook phrased to pompously instill in the reader some feeling of the majesty and due regard for the process (etc), but in reality it is just pompous for "send a letter requesting" is it not?
Google and Dropbox must comply.
Well, no. They do not "have to" do anything. You do not *have to comply* with anything. Such is the nature of existance and it has always been thus. Of course, those seeking compliance are also free to torture you until you do as they want, but you do not "have to comply". What happens when an irresistable force (the torturer) meets and immovable object (the one refusing to comply) depends on which has the greatest resolve. -- The fact that there's a Highway to Hell but only a Stairway to Heaven says a lot about anticipated traffic volume.